67 (1999) is a symphony for large orchestra and SATB chorus, with texts adapted from the poetry of Walt Whitman.
[1] It was commissioned by Ford Lacy and Cece Smith for the Dallas Symphony Orchestra and Chorus’ centennial celebration.
The work was premiered in 2000, with Andrew Litton conducting the Dallas Symphony Orchestra and Chorus.
The Second Symphony was very favorably received at its premiere, with TIME describing it as, "Now brazen and glittering, now radiantly visionary...the work of a composer unafraid of grand gestures and openhearted lyricism.
"[2] However, the symphony has since received harsh criticism due to its exceptionally free embrace of tonality and its distinctly optimistic outlook.